2
Acknowledged
Mandate DEFRA to enact all provisions from the Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill.
Recommendation
In order to implement much-needed robust animal welfare safeguards, the Department must ensure that every provision from the Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill is brought into force during the current Parliament. (Paragraph 8) Pet Breeding
Government Response Summary
The government acknowledges the recommendation but states the Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill fell due to the dissolution of Parliament. They confirm commitment to animal welfare by listing other passed acts and supporting new Private Members’ Bills addressing some measures from the original Kept Animals Bill.
Government Response
Acknowledged
Government Response
Acknowledged
HM Government
Acknowledged
The Government remains committed to animal welfare and will introduce the most ambitious programme for animal welfare in a generation. With the proroguing and dissolution of Parliament ahead of the July general election, all business in the House of Commons came to an end and bills which had not received Royal Assent fell. This was the case with Private Members’ Bills which included measures originally included in the Animal Welfare (Kept Animals) Bill. The following Acts received Royal Assent during the last Parliamentary session and have either come into force or will soon. The Animal Welfare (Livestock Exports) Act came into force on 22 July 2024. The Act prohibits the export of cattle, sheep, goats, pigs, and horses for slaughter and fattening from Great Britain, stopping stress, exhaustion and injury caused by this unnecessary trade. The Animal Welfare (Primate Licences) (England) Regulations 2024 were signed into law on 5 March 2024 and will come into effect on 6 April 2026. The Regulations introduce a licensing scheme, setting strict rules to ensure that only private keepers who can provide zoo-level welfare standards, will be able to keep primates. The Pet Abduction Act came into force on 24 August 2024 and makes it an offence to abduct a cat or dog in England and Northern Ireland. Defra maintains a close working relationship with the zoo sector, and we will continue to build upon this to identify possible further improvements. We aim to publish updated zoo standards shortly, which we have developed in collaboration with the sector and the Zoos Expert Committee, which will raise standards and support enforcement. The Government also recognises the distress livestock worrying can cause animals and their keepers. We have committed to support a Private Members’ Bill sponsored by Aphra Brandreth MP, which introduces new measures to tackle the serious issue of livestock worrying. The Bill will modernise the definitions and scope, strengthen police powers to improve enforcement and increase the maximum penalty to an unlimited fine to act as a deterrent. As outlined in our manifesto, we are committed to ending puppy smuggling. The Government recently announced its support for the Animal Welfare (Import of Dogs, Cats and Ferrets) Bill, a Private Members’ Bill sponsored by Dr Danny Chambers MP. The Bill will close loopholes in the non-commercial pet travel rules that are abused by unscrupulous traders and give the government powers to prevent the supply of low-welfare pets to the United Kingdom. We are fully supportive of this Bill and would like to see it pass through both Houses as soon as Parliamentary time allows.
Source
Inquiry
Pet welfare and abuse
Report
Second Report - Pet welfare and abuse
05 Apr 2024
HC 161
Timeline
Recommendation age
2.2 yrs
Report published
05 Apr 2024